Donald R Owen, Jr. v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 2023
Docket21S-LW-00333
StatusPublished

This text of Donald R Owen, Jr. v. State of Indiana (Donald R Owen, Jr. v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald R Owen, Jr. v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Jun 08 2023, 10:47 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 21S–LW–333

Donald R. Owen, Jr., Appellant,

–v–

State of Indiana, Appellee.

Argued: October 11, 2022 | Decided: June 8, 2023

Direct Appeal from the Elkhart Circuit Court, No. 20C01–1912–MR–6

The Honorable Michael A. Christofeno, Judge

Opinion by Justice Slaughter Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Goff, and Molter concur. Slaughter, Justice.

Defendant, Donald R. Owen, Jr., was an acknowledged gang leader in Elkhart County. When members of the local Latin Kings gang believed a woman among them was a police snitch, they interrogated her, roughed her up, and eventually killed her—but not before contacting Owen, who later arrived at the scene and both supervised and participated in torturing and killing her brutally. Once she was dead, Owen oversaw cleaning up the crime scene. Then he stuffed her corpse into a trash can, drove it to Michigan, hid it in a ditch, and covered it with weeds and camouflage.

A jury convicted Owen of murder, felony robbery resulting in serious bodily injury, and two counts of criminal confinement. During sentencing, the jury found three statutory aggravators beyond a reasonable doubt and recommended a sentence of life without parole for the murder conviction, which the trial court adopted. In this direct appeal, Owen argues there was insufficient evidence that he was a major participant in the murder and insufficient evidence that he committed the murder in furtherance of a criminal organization. He also argues the trial court abused its discretion by declining to adopt his proposed jury instructions and by relying on sentencing factors not supported by the record. We affirm.

I

A

One evening in October 2019, Kim Dyer visited a house in Elkhart County. She brought an acquaintance, Rob Porter, a known drug dealer, who planned to sell marijuana to others at the house. Those others included Mario Angulo and Matthew Murzynski, both members of the Latin Kings gang. Everyone at the house that evening was socializing and using drugs.

At some point that night, the mood turned. Angulo, Murzynski, and another woman named Hope Lowry suspected Dyer of associating with a rival gang and began searching her possessions. They found a notebook containing a diagram of the house and a list of names, including people at the house who were Latin Kings members. Murzynski then directed Dyer

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 21S-LW-333 | June 8, 2023 Page 2 of 18 to the basement. There, they interrogated her, accused her of being a police snitch, and began roughing her up.

Angulo then contacted another Latin Kings member, Defendant, Donald Owen, and asked him to come by because things were getting “serious”. Angulo also told Owen that he may need to bring a weapon, and that he had an opportunity to commit a robbery. Owen pressed Angulo for more details, but Angulo was in over his head and needed Owen’s help: “I wish I could tell you, but I can’t . . . I need your help”.

After a few hours Tylor Saunders, the house’s owner, went to the basement and saw that Dyer looked distraught, had puffy cheeks, a busted lip, and a red face. She “looked like she had been roughed up.” Dyer’s boyfriend, Jose Lopez, Jr., tried to get Angulo and Murzynski to release Dyer, but they said they could not let her go for fear she would go to the police. At that time, Porter was guarding Dyer in the basement and holding a rifle. Lopez then left the house. Murzynski told Saunders the situation with Dyer was a “big Latin King thing”.

Later that night, Angulo and Lowry turned on Porter. They accused him of raping Dyer while they were in the basement. Then they forced Porter back downstairs, where he saw Dyer. She was zip-tied and looked “like she got her ass kicked.” And her mouth was taped shut to muffle her cries and screams.

About this time, Owen arrived at the house, carrying a knife and wearing surgical gloves as well as a bandana that covered his face. He took control of the situation. According to Porter, “when [Owen] said something to [Angulo and Murzynski], they listened. And they basically . . . [looked] to him for guidance.” Owen later said he had been called to “lay the house down”, which means to “show your authority” and that “actions stop[ped]” when he came in. Owen acted “like he [was] the boss.”

Owen promptly robbed Porter of his jewelry, beat him, and zip-tied him. Owen then began questioning Dyer about being an informant. During the questioning, Owen removed his bandana and said “there was no point in having it on now because [Dyer knew she was] gonna die.”

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 21S-LW-333 | June 8, 2023 Page 3 of 18 After his questioning, Owen returned upstairs to the kitchen. Murzynski took Porter up to the kitchen, where Owen beat him again. Then Murzynski took out a cellphone and made Porter record a video in which he accepted blame for what happened to Dyer. After the forced confession, Owen made Porter crawl into a nearby dog cage and ordered him to put out a cigarette on his own tongue. Finally, Owen had Porter write down the names of his children and threatened to kill his family if he ever told anyone what happened that night. While in the kitchen, Porter saw Owen and Murzynski perform the Latin Kings handshake, forming a crown with their hands.

Porter was then sent back to the basement. He heard Owen tell Murzynski to “[m]ake him [Porter] go to sleep and make her [Dyer] go to sleep.” In the basement, Porter saw that Dyer was still zip-tied, beaten, duct-taped, and her head was shaved. Porter also overheard Murzynski and Angulo discussing they had cut off some of her toes. Murzynski and Angulo then began pouring bleach down Dyer’s throat with a hose, and they duct-taped her body from her head to her shoulders until she looked like a “mummy”. Angulo told Porter he would need to help strangle Dyer if he ever wanted to leave the house alive. As Porter helped Angulo strangle Dyer with the hose, Owen entered the basement. Porter eventually let go and saw Dyer gasp for air. As Porter tried to leave the house, Owen followed him outside and cut his wrist with a bowie knife, leaving a deep cut.

Owen returned to the basement and was there when Angulo grabbed a broken beer bottle and slit Dyer’s throat. She fell to the ground and “flop[ped] like a fish”. Owen never intervened. After the murder, Owen “tagged” the room by spraying his name, “King Duke”, and other Latin Kings symbols on the basement walls. He then led the effort to clean up the messy crime scene. He put Dyer’s body into a trash can, moved the trash can into a car, and helped drive it to Michigan, where he hid it in a ditch and covered it in weeds and camouflage.

Lopez, Dyer’s boyfriend, later heard that she had been killed. He returned to Saunders’s house, where he found all the carpeting and furniture removed and the walls still covered in graffiti. Lopez told

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 21S-LW-333 | June 8, 2023 Page 4 of 18 officers that Dyer had been killed and directed them to Saunders’s house. The officers found Dyer’s body in Michigan. The autopsy revealed she had sustained as many as eighty-three distinct, gruesome injuries. From the autopsy results, the medical examiner concluded Dyer died as a result of multiple, contributing injuries, “including the blunt force injuries, the sharp force injury to the neck, and the asphyxia”.

B

Following Dyer’s murder, Owen fled to Texas, where he was later arrested, and then transported back to Elkhart County for trial. The State charged him with murder, Level 2 felony robbery resulting in serious bodily injury, and two counts of Level 3 felony criminal confinement.

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Donald R Owen, Jr. v. State of Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-r-owen-jr-v-state-of-indiana-ind-2023.